Contact Us
Categories
- Kentucky Consumer Protection Act
- Judgment creditors
- Fractional Investment
- Section 1031 transactions
- Investment
- U.S. Supreme Court
- Kentucky minimum wage
- Lenders
- Minimum wage
- Arbitration
- Breach
- Closing
- Closing Disclosure
- Condemnation
- Good Faith Estimate
- Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs)
- HUD-1 Settlement Statement
- Reverse mortgages
- Truth in Lending Act
- Zoning Regulations
- “Know Before You Owe”
- Affordable Housing
- Commercial Real Estate
- Dodd-Frank Act
- Economic Development
- Land Use Law
- Landlord
- Lease
- Mortgage
- Planning and Zoning
- Purchase Contract
- Real Estate Law
- Rescission
- Tenant
- URLTA
- Deed
- Drones
- Homeowners Association
- Land Surveys
- National Association of Realtors (NAR)
- Plat
- Property Lines
- Property Survey
- Property Titling
- Real Estate Agents
- Same-Sex Couples
- Agritourism
- Co-Signing
- Commercial Lease
- Condominium
- Deeds
- Emergency Preparedness
- Emotional Support Animals
- Exclusive Use Clause
- Horizontal Property Law
- Insurance Companies
- Insured
- Kentucky Condominium Act
- KRS 383.500
- LBAR
- Loans
- Natural Disasters
- Overlay Zoning
- Rural Areas
- Steenrod v. Louisville Yacht Club Association
- Title Insurance Policies
- Trulia
- Uncategorized
- Zillow
- "Right-of-Way Agents"
- Benningfield v. Zinmeister
- Bluegrass Pipeline
- Boards of Adjustment
- Boilerplate Language
- Building Inspection
- Code Enforcement
- Conditional uses
- Conservation Easement
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”)
- Credit Report
- Credit Score
- Dog owners
- Easement
- Eminent Domain
- ESIGN
- Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
- FICO
- General Forms
- Homebuyers
- Inspection
- Kentucky landowners
- KRS §258.235(4)
- KRS §383.580
- Multi-unit properties
- Occupancy Fraud
- Power of Attorney ("POA")
- Screening
- Security Deposit
- Servicers
- The Loan Estimate form
- Truth in Lending Statement
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Variances
- Zoning Ordinance Text Amendment
Showing 1 post tagged survey standards.
New 2016 ALTA/NSPS Survey Standards Now In Effect
In the real estate survey world, boundaries are shifting. In October of 2015, the American Land Title Association (“ALTA”) and National Society of Professional Surveyors (“NSPS”)[1] approved the 206 Minimum Standard Details Requirements for ALTA/NSPS Land Title Surveys, and these became effective as of February 23, 2016. There are a number of changes to the required surveys designed to create a more easily understood plat and thwart potential miscommunication among surveyors, title companies, clients and lenders.
[1] It should be noted that the NSPS is a successor organization to the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping (“ACSM”), so these standards are an update to the prior “Minimum Standard Detail Requirements for ALTA/ACSM Land Title Surveys.” More >